8 Essential Non-Fiction Books
1) When Pride Still Mattered, by David Maraniss. This book is not only the definitive biography of Vince Lombardi, the legendary football coach, it is a prism into an America that is gone. Maraniss used Lombardi’s reputation and life to explain the coach’s life, but also a time when your word was bond, and hard work, craftsmanship, and pride in one’s self and work was paramount. Lombardi spend years as a football coach at a small Catholic High school, and he scratched and clawed his way to the top. There was no building of a ‘brand’, no posing for the cameras, and no handouts. It’s a fantastic journey into a more difficult, and perhaps better, America.
2) Carnage and Culture, by Victor Davis Hanson. There are reasons why the Christian West has won key battles throughout history. Hanson details all the key decisions, predicated on the culture of the West, that helped the British win at Rorke’s Drift, Cortez win at Tenochtitlan, and the Americans to win at Midway. There are other important battles talked about in the book. The chapter I go to repeatedly is the one on Cortez in Mexico. How a much smaller group of Spaniards could take down a powerful and violent Aztec Empire is fascinating. Hanson’s thesis is solid, and he impeccably defends it.
3) Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, written by Himself. This is the first of the autobiographies, and the most raw. A young Douglass intuitively recognized not only the double and triple standards of society in his young life, he learned, and unashamedly described, human nature. The worst personality traits of each sex, the way power corrupts a soul, the power of literacy – Douglass learned them all before he was ten. A short read, but it has the depth of a much longer book.
4) The Underground History of American Education, by John Taylor Gatto. Gatto was a schoolteacher for 30 years. The last decade of his career he researched the creation and motivation behind the American public school system. What he found is both fascinating and disturbing. Disturbing is probably not a strong enough word. A small group of powerful people wanted a mass of malleable, thoughtless citizens who would be good factory workers and soldiers. To create the Elite top of the pyramid, look at the curriculum of the 8 top boarding schools in the United States (Kent, Hotchkiss et al). To create the managers of society, look at where I went, Brooklyn Tech High School. To look at how to create millions of unthinking consumers, take a walk through your local K-12 system. If you really want to get black pilled, read the Common Core State Standards. Gatto rips the cover off the system and shows you some dirty secrets. Often people ask me “what can one person do?” You can do what John Taylor Gatto did.
5) Until Proven Innocent, by Stuart Taylor and KC Johnson. When they look back at the ‘woke’ era, this incident, meticulously recounted by the authors, will be one of the bellwethers of the time. 3 young men, all white and well off, were accused of a rape they did not commit. Because of their race and economic status, the Corporate Media told the American people, for months, that they were rapists and racists. The rhetoric and actions of the press, the awful behavior of the school administration and many professors, show you that the media and woke culture are 2 of the most despicable entities ever let loose within American society. The future Robot Historians will wonder why we didn’t put the press and university administrators on an ice floe and push them into the sea.
6) The Great Bridge, by David McCullough. The Brooklyn Bridge construction project began right after the Civil War. It is still one of the most busy and functional bridges today. How did they do it? Who dreamed it up and built it? There was no electricity. There were no combustion engines. And yet, the bridge towers are 275 feet high, and one of them is grounded on bedrock. The Manhattan tower never made it down to bedrock. They were so deep under the riverbed, and the silt was so thick, Roebling, the chief engineer, made the executive decision to anchor the tower and move forward. In an era of small to no government help, a gold standard, no unions, no bailouts … you get a look at how things got done and the intellectual firepower of the men who got them done. One of the best post-Civil War books of all time.
7) The Power Broker, by Robert Caro. This book won the Pulitzer Prize. Caro goes through the life of Robert Moses, one man who irrevocably changed the shape of arguably the most important city on earth: New York City. Moses wasn’t interested in money, but he was interested in power. Once he learned how to get it, he got more, and he learned how to keep it. The early years of his career under Alfred E. Smith are particularly interesting as Caro explains the monumental amount of effort Moses put in to cement his positions of power. A study of government, the nature of power, and the gaping flaws within people are all on display. This is one of those books where the subject is closed. No one will ever write another biography of Robert Moses as there is nothing left to write.
8) The Illusion of Victory, by Thomas Fleming. One of the last nails in the coffin of a once free America is the Progressive Era and America’s entry into World War I. The story you get in school (see #4) is that the good guys suited up and beat the bad Germans. Then they celebrated Armistice Day. This isn’t even the comic book level of history usually found in the textbooks. Fleming explains the massive propaganda campaign surrounding America’s entry into The Great War. You learn that the Industrial and Banking interests didn’t really care if a few hundred thousand American citizens were killed. If they were made financially whole, that didn’t matter. Britain and France were going to lose, and America’s entry was necessary to win. With the help of the worst president in American History, Woodrow Wilson, America went into an unnecessary war, and the Progressives got their claws into the American Free Enterprise system. It was all they needed to eventually bring the whole thing down. Fleming got kicked out of the Conservative author club for telling too much truth. This book is an example of that.
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